英闻天下——418 Deputies Urge to Reform Wildlife Protection Law
时间:2013-03-22 05:41:53
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(单词翻译)
China's wildlife protection law was passed in 1989 with the aim of sustaining wildlife as a resource.
Now academics and animal rights
activists2 are pushing to reform the law.
Mang Ping is a professor with the Central Institute of
Socialist3 Studies in Beijing.
Professor Mang contributed to writing the draft proposal and is optimistic about the law being changed.
"The draft proposal was backed by many NPC deputies this time. Our law says that if over 30 members
jointly5 proposed legislation, it will get more attention during the reviewing process, which makes it
eligible6 for the fast-track process to be made into law. So the
joint4 proposal by 37 members this time is really something significant."
The draft proposal outlines four main
amendments7 to the law.
These include an increase in the animal species covered under the law and more involvement by NGO's and the public in wildlife protection.
Harsher punishments for law breakers and stronger legal support for animal rights activists are also major recommendations.
But Animals Asia's China representative, Toby Zhang, says that while the current draft proposal is an important step in the right direction, it doesn't go far enough.
"We really hope that China should have animal welfare law. It's not only about wild animals but about all animals and regulate the behavior of people when they deal with animals, no matter if the animals are wild or not. If that law is in place a lot of problems will be solved."
Those problems include the
repercussions8 for animal rights activists who choose to put themselves at risk when protecting animals.
Three weeks ago animal rights activists stopped a truck loaded up with over 900 dogs on a busy highway in Chongqing.
The dogs were headed to China's southern Guangdong province to be sold to restaurants to be served as food.
In that incident an animal
activist1 Peng Tao who led the group told the China Daily the driver attacked him and the police had to be called.
Xie Zheng is the
founder9 of Don't Eat Friends, a Beijing-based animal protection
awareness10 organization.
He was there in Chongqing to stop the truck and recently stopped three illegal shipments of dogs that were being delivered to restaurants
"I thought of this as an opportunity. I didn't feel nervous or fearful. I wanted to expose the delivery of dogs to the public, and let the people know that it's
immoral11 and
illicit12."
Xie and other animal rights activists chose to put themselves at risk even though they were not protected under any animal welfare protection law.
Zhang says that a new, more general animal protection law would not only benefit the animals but the people who protect them as well.
"But without this kind of law we cannot have these people carry out their protective actions very legally, very properly while there are so many people who can attack these groups of people for their behaviors like stopping the trucks in the highway and they can be easily challenged. I think that's a problem."
But Zhang says that a more general animal welfare law is not going to happen any time soon and the movement must take one step at a time.
For CRI, I'm Alexandra Blucher.
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